Anonymous ID: 401755 March 24, 2023, 1:12 a.m. No.18571294   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1307

>>18571214

https://www.monroeinstitute.org/

 

It's not the "CIA's" Gateway Process, rather, it is Robert Monroe's "Gateway Experience".

 

After Bob Monroe had his "Journeys Out Of The Body" published in 1971, Spookville sent a team from its anti-ballistic missile defense group to Monroe's Northern Virginia horse farm

 

"Located in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, the Monroe Institute sits on 300-plus peaceful rolling acres with panoramic mountain views. Just three hours from Washington, DC, and 45 minutes from Charlottesville, VA, Monroe has called Nelson County home for more than 45 years."

 

https://www.monroeinstitute.org/products/gateway-experience

Anonymous ID: 401755 March 24, 2023, 1:25 a.m. No.18571307   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18571294

The Spooks developed its "Project Stargate" and Remote Viewing Technology: The CIA's Files on Psychic Spying.

 

Stargate Project was a secret U.S. Army unit established in 1978 at Fort Meade, Maryland, by the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) and SRI International (a California contractor) to investigate the potential for psychic phenomena in military and domestic intelligence applications. The Project, and its precursors and sister projects, originally went by various code names – 'Gondola Wish', 'Stargate', 'Grill Flame', 'Center Lane', 'Project CF', 'Sun Streak', 'Scanate' – until 1991 when they were consolidated and rechristened as "Stargate Project".

 

Stargate Project's work primarily involved remote viewing, the purported ability to psychically "see" events, sites, or information from a great distance.[1] The project was overseen until 1987 by Lt. Frederick Holmes "Skip" Atwater, an aide and "psychic headhunter" to Maj. Gen. Albert Stubblebine, and later president of the Monroe Institute.[2] The unit was small scale, comprising about 15 to 20 individuals, and was run out of "an old, leaky wooden barracks".[3]

 

The Stargate Project was terminated and declassified in 1995 after a CIA report concluded that it was never useful in any intelligence operation. Information provided by the program was vague and included irrelevant and erroneous data, and there were suspicions of inter-judge reliability.[4]: 5–4  The program was featured in the 2004 book and 2009 film, both titled The Men Who Stare at Goats,[5][6][7][8] although neither mentions it by name. [Wiki].

 

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stargate_Project

 

"The Nen Who Stare at Goats" was a limited hangout book, later movie, created to muddy the waters of its very real Stargate Project.

 

The Best Remote Viewer

 

Ingo Douglas Swann (14 September 1933, Telluride, Colorado[2] – 31 January 2013, New York City[3]) was an American psychic, artist, and writer known for being the co-creator, along with Russell Targ and Harold E. Puthoff,[4] of remote viewing, and specifically the Stargate Project….

 

…..

Early Coordinate Remote Viewing experiments

Edit

Targ and Puthoff write about their pilot experiments, "We couldn't overlook the possibility that perhaps Ingo knew the geographical features of the Earth and their approximate latitude and longitude. (It is Swann who suggests these Coordinate Remote Viewing tests, not the experimenters. He is in control.) "Or it was possible that we were inadvertently cueing the subject (Swann), since we as experimenters knew what the answers were."[29]

 

Soon Targ and Puthoff performed more experiments with Swann and the controls were tightened to eliminate the possibility of error. This time Swann was given the latitude and longitude of ten targets, in the end there would be ten runs, for a total of 100. Only the evaluations of the ten targets from the tenth run, the last, were disclosed. The results of the targets from the previous ninety (runs 1–9) are ignored. For the tenth run Swann had seven hits, two neutral and one miss. The experiments came to a close. Targ and Puthoff were positive "Something was happening, but they are not clear what it is."[30] (This method of selecting a small number of "guesses" from a larger, sometimes never disclosed larger number, is known as the free response method in remote viewing but could be called cherry picking.)[31][32][33] According to Swann and Stanford Research International, his RV was correct probably 95% of the time. His personally trained students' RV were 85% correct, 85% of the time.[34][35] See:Stargate Project

 

Swann's descriptions of Jupiter

 

Swann proposed a study to Targ and Puthoff. At first they resisted, for the resulting descriptions would be impossible to verify. Yet, on the evening 27 April 1973 Targ and Puthoff recorded Swann's remote viewing session of the planet Jupiter and Jupiter's moons,[36] prior to the Voyager probe's visit there in 1979.

 

Swann asked for 30 minutes of silence. According to Swann, his ability to see Jupiter took about three and a half minutes. In the session he made several reports on the physical features of Jupiter, such as its atmosphere and the surface of its core. Swann claimed to see bands of crystals in the atmosphere, which he likened to clouds and possibly like the rings of Saturn. The Voyager probe later confirmed the existence of the rings of Jupiter, although these rings are not in the planet's atmosphere.[37] However, Swann's claim that crystals are present in the atmosphere is supported by observations by NASA's Galileo spacecraft of clouds of ammonia ice crystals in the northwest corner of Jupiter's Great Red Spot.[38]

 

The following are Swann's own version of his statements from 1995, 22 years later than the 1973 experiments took place:[39]….

 

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ingo_Swann